illnevertell
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? NJ
Hi there,
I posted on here in the past and I got incredible feedback. In any event, I teach a program focused on freelance makeup artistry. This is NOT a cosmetology program and has no affiliation with state certification or standards.
For the first time in 14 semesters, I have had a student request a refund three months after signing a contract. I have an eight page contract that explicitly states the terms of the refunds--meaning, that there are no refunds, regardless of circumstance. It also explains that upon signing, they are securing their space and time, so its not the rendering of the service that completes the exchange, but the physical space they have made unavailable to other students. It also explains that regardless of their personal choice to attend, the service is still rendered. Meaning the education is being made available to them, its just their choice to attend. Also, if a student chooses to not attend in excess of three days, it is considered an "offense" if they do not have documented support.
I do have a force majeure clause in there that would allow the student to credit the time towards a future semester if something super major prevents them from taking the one they signed up for.
In any event, this student emailed me and requested a refund explaining that her parents have encountered financial hardships and she needs to give them money. She took out a loan to pay for this course specifically.
I replied explaining that she signed an eight page contract outlining the refund policy and that this was a legal contract.
She replied claiming that she is "moving" (new excuse) and that she wouldn't be able to take the class. I haven't yet answered this email, but I was going to reply saying something like "you signed this contract aware of the dates, in fact, I molded the final semester dates based on your availability." Additionally, there are those clauses I referenced above that state that a students attendance does not determine whether or not the service was rendered.
I have two separate kinds of semesters. One called the "weekender" catered to local students. And one called "intensive" catered to out of state students as 75% of my student body is from out of state and out of country. So even if she was moving, I have services designed to accommodate her.
I was thinking of offering her a credit towards a future Intensive semester so that she could come back and take it at a more suitable time. I was also thinking of offering her a credit towards four full day crash courses (equal value) so she could take something sooner. If I amended the contract for a future semester, I could only offer her the furthest out semester I have (July). Otherwise It would be a more "open" credit where she could choose a new semester once they are released. I know she will not want July and I feel like the exchange will not be specific enough if its just an open credit.
My fear is amending the contract with this particular person or even offering anything is that the email will would technically serve as an amendment.
It sounds to me like this girl wants to free up loan money that was allocated to education for personal reasons and is using every trick in the book.
Should I offer her a future semester and/or a crash course or should I stick to my guns and enforce the existing contract?
This person signed the contract fully aware of the dates. Does moving have any relevance to the enforceability of a contract? Again, she changed the reason for the request from the first email to the second. So the first case she is claiming her parents financial hardship. Next she is saying she is moving and wont be able to take it.
Any feedback would be appreciated.
Hi there,
I posted on here in the past and I got incredible feedback. In any event, I teach a program focused on freelance makeup artistry. This is NOT a cosmetology program and has no affiliation with state certification or standards.
For the first time in 14 semesters, I have had a student request a refund three months after signing a contract. I have an eight page contract that explicitly states the terms of the refunds--meaning, that there are no refunds, regardless of circumstance. It also explains that upon signing, they are securing their space and time, so its not the rendering of the service that completes the exchange, but the physical space they have made unavailable to other students. It also explains that regardless of their personal choice to attend, the service is still rendered. Meaning the education is being made available to them, its just their choice to attend. Also, if a student chooses to not attend in excess of three days, it is considered an "offense" if they do not have documented support.
I do have a force majeure clause in there that would allow the student to credit the time towards a future semester if something super major prevents them from taking the one they signed up for.
In any event, this student emailed me and requested a refund explaining that her parents have encountered financial hardships and she needs to give them money. She took out a loan to pay for this course specifically.
I replied explaining that she signed an eight page contract outlining the refund policy and that this was a legal contract.
She replied claiming that she is "moving" (new excuse) and that she wouldn't be able to take the class. I haven't yet answered this email, but I was going to reply saying something like "you signed this contract aware of the dates, in fact, I molded the final semester dates based on your availability." Additionally, there are those clauses I referenced above that state that a students attendance does not determine whether or not the service was rendered.
I have two separate kinds of semesters. One called the "weekender" catered to local students. And one called "intensive" catered to out of state students as 75% of my student body is from out of state and out of country. So even if she was moving, I have services designed to accommodate her.
I was thinking of offering her a credit towards a future Intensive semester so that she could come back and take it at a more suitable time. I was also thinking of offering her a credit towards four full day crash courses (equal value) so she could take something sooner. If I amended the contract for a future semester, I could only offer her the furthest out semester I have (July). Otherwise It would be a more "open" credit where she could choose a new semester once they are released. I know she will not want July and I feel like the exchange will not be specific enough if its just an open credit.
My fear is amending the contract with this particular person or even offering anything is that the email will would technically serve as an amendment.
It sounds to me like this girl wants to free up loan money that was allocated to education for personal reasons and is using every trick in the book.
Should I offer her a future semester and/or a crash course or should I stick to my guns and enforce the existing contract?
This person signed the contract fully aware of the dates. Does moving have any relevance to the enforceability of a contract? Again, she changed the reason for the request from the first email to the second. So the first case she is claiming her parents financial hardship. Next she is saying she is moving and wont be able to take it.
Any feedback would be appreciated.